​Philippine jihadists pledge support to Islamic State

Muslim militant guerrillas in the Philippines have pledged their support to the Islamic State organization that now controls large amounts of Iraq and Syria, terrorizing locals and carrying out mass executions of those not willing to join them.

In clips uploaded on
YouTube over the past few weeks, two militant Islamic groups from
the south of the Philippines, the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom
Fighters (BIFF) and the Abu Sayyaf rebels are giving their
allegiance to the Islamic State.

Abu Misry Mama, a BIFF spokesman, confirmed to AFP by telephone
Friday that a video had been uploaded Wednesday.

“We have an alliance with the Islamic State and Abu Bakr
al-Baghdadi,” he said referring to the jihadist group’s leader.
Misry said his group had no plans to impose the strict brand of
radical Islam imposed by IS in the Philippines. “But if they need
our help, why not?” he said.

BIFF split from Philippines’ main Muslim group, the 12,000 strong
Moro Islamic Liberation Front, in 2008. While MILF signed a peace
agreement with the government of President Aquino last March,
BIFF which is believed to have just a few hundred fighters, has
refused peace talks, preferring to continue its decade’s long
campaign to set up an Islamic State in the southern Philippines.

A spokesman for an army division based in the southern
Philippines, Colonel Dickson Hermoso, described BIFF as a
terrorist group which uses extortion to fund its activities,
although he said he didn’t think they were sending people to Iraq
or Syria.

Another video by the Abu Sayyaf rebels has also been uploaded
onto YouTube showing a group of about a dozen men standing in a
forest clearing with one of their most senior leaders Isnilon
Hapilon mentioning the IS leader al-Baghdadi, while reading out a
statement pledging their alliance to the Islamic State. Hapilon
has a $5 million reward on his head by the US which has said it
considers Abu Sayyaf a “foreign terror organization” and
has said it carries out kidnappings, beheadings and bombings.

However, Philippine military spokesman Lieutenant-colonel Ramon
Zagala has dismissed both the video clips as
“propaganda,” refusing to comment on them.

“This is propaganda and we will not give these terrorists the
satisfaction by commenting,” he told AFP.